Abstract

Spontaneous copy number variant (CNV) mutations are an important factor in genomic structural variation, genomic disorders, and cancer. A major class of CNVs, termed nonrecurrent CNVs, is thought to arise by nonhomologous DNA repair mechanisms due to the presence of short microhomologies, blunt ends, or short insertions at junctions of normal and de novo pathogenic CNVs, features recapitulated in experimental systems in which CNVs are induced by exogenous replication stress. To test whether the canonical nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway of double-strand break (DSB) repair is involved in the formation of this class of CNVs, chromosome integrity was monitored in NHEJ–deficient Xrcc4 −/− mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells following treatment with low doses of aphidicolin, a DNA replicative polymerase inhibitor. Mouse ES cells exhibited replication stress-induced CNV formation in the same manner as human fibroblasts, including the existence of syntenic hotspot regions, such as in the Auts2 and Wwox loci. The frequency and location of spontaneous and aphidicolin-induced CNV formation were not altered by loss of Xrcc4, as would be expected if canonical NHEJ were the predominant pathway of CNV formation. Moreover, de novo CNV junctions displayed a typical pattern of microhomology and blunt end use that did not change in the absence of Xrcc4. A number of complex CNVs were detected in both wild-type and Xrcc4 −/− cells, including an example of a catastrophic, chromothripsis event. These results establish that nonrecurrent CNVs can be, and frequently are, formed by mechanisms other than Xrcc4-dependent NHEJ.

Highlights

  • The importance of genomic copy number variants (CNVs), defined as submicroscopic deletions or duplications ranging in size from 50 bp to over a megabase [1], has become better understood in recent years

  • One DNA damage response pathway implicated in CNV formation is nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), which repairs broken DNA ends by Xrcc4dependent direct ligation

  • We examined the effects of loss of Xrcc4 and NHEJ on CNV formation following replication stress in mouse cells

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of genomic copy number variants (CNVs), defined as submicroscopic deletions or duplications ranging in size from 50 bp to over a megabase [1], has become better understood in recent years. Normal polymorphic CNVs are a major contributor to human genomic variation and phenotypic diversity [2,3,4,5,6], while spontaneous CNVs are a very important and frequent cause of genetic and developmental disorders, including intellectual disability, neuropsychiatric disorders, and structural birth defects [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14] Their frequency further suggests a high de novo mutation rate, with estimates between 0.01 and 0.05 per meiosis [6,15,16,17].

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